Episode 4: The Reckoning (Part 2 of 3)
While this episode can be followed independently, it is best experienced after Episode 4 (Part 1 of 3), which establishes much of the documentary and historical foundation referenced throughout this continuation. In this deeply investigative installment, we confront the central question increasingly raised by the documentary record itself: Who really fleeced Farida Kattan?
Building upon the letters, petitions, promissory notes, confessions, and legal records introduced in the previous episode, this chapter turns the spotlight toward Abd al-Raheem al-Shareef al-Khaleely — the man Raphael Cormack largely frames as a disgruntled former follower of Doctor Dahesh turned whistleblower.
But the documents presented here complicate that narrative dramatically. Through handwritten letters, notarized legal instruments, bank correspondence, memoranda, confessions, diary entries, and archival notices, the episode reconstructs a sprawling documentary trail involving inheritance disputes, financial maneuvering, occult practices, psychological collapse, family tensions, and allegations of manipulation surrounding the Kattan family network.
A pivotal point in the episode is the discussion surrounding Farida Kattan’s 1935 General Power of Attorney — contextualized by her October 25, 1943 letter to Doctor Dahesh, previously introduced in Part 1, in which she insists that Abd al-Raheem al-Shareef published attacks against Dahesh in her name without her knowledge or consent. Among the materials examined are:
* Doctor Dahesh’s 1938 “Statement to the Public Opinion,” accusing al-Shareef of orchestrating the smear campaign carried out under Farida’s name.
* Correspondence tied to the liquidation of inheritance funds in Egypt.
* Al-Shareef’s memoranda directing Nasri Kattan on financial strategy and inheritance maneuvering.
* Farida’s deeply personal letters describing adultery, coercion, exploitation, emotional devastation, and her belief that Doctor Dahesh had rescued her from disgrace.
* The confession, arrest, and eventual psychological collapse of Nasri Kattan.
* The broader Kattan family network, reconstructed through business correspondence, legal records, and archival material from Palestine and Sudan.
* The handwritten “Lament” letter attributed to al-Shareef himself.
* Two explosive notarized legal notices from Emilia Carus Bergamaschi accusing al-Shareef of spiritual fraud, sexual coercion, financial exploitation, and abuse carried out under the guise of spirit communication.
Taken together, these records present a portrait far more disturbing — and far more complex — than the simplified “whistleblower” narrative advanced in Holy Men of the Electromagnetic Age.
The episode also explores the theological and philosophical framework through which Daheshists interpret al-Shareef’s actions, while sharply distinguishing Daheshist doctrine from the spiritualist practices and occult claims associated with al-Shareef himself. Along the way, the discussion broadens into questions of free will, evil, suffering, moral accountability, scientific materialism, and the limits of reductionist explanations of human experience.
Ultimately, this episode argues that the real story Cormack may have missed was not merely the existence of credible accusations against Doctor Dahesh — but the documentary evidence suggesting that many of those accusations emerged from a deeply compromised network already collapsing under manipulation, coercion, scandal, and financial intrigue.
Listener Advisory: Some episodes include historically documented material that touches on sensitive themes such as coercion, moral corruption, and emotional exploitation. These accounts are shared for the sake of truth and justice — not for shock. Listener discretion is advised.
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